Remote viewing is a tool you can use to improve your life. It is a tool that must be earned on a regular basis with practice and fine-tuned by honorable use. It is not glamorous, not a particularly exciting process to go through, not something to pick up when the rare mood strikes you, or a useless star-streaked ride through wondrous astral planes. Perception based remote viewing is an attention management skill.

Remote viewing can be used to find out just about anything. The most practical way to spend your time in session is to discover information that will help improve your life, and perhaps the lives of others. Sure you could attempt to find out if you should keep seeing some guy, or when the next big earthquake is going to occur, but you could also find out your next best employment opportunity; or what you should be doing to obtain optimum health; perhaps even work with others to find missing children and assist in their recovery; or discover the method to develop the next bestselling widget to help improve the quality of a sick person’s life half way around the world.

People have all kinds of wild ideas about what a session might look like. It is not meant to appear “artistic” or feel “other worldly” but is more a data gathering function that results in a simple diagram with simple shapes and words that help describe what is going on. Most people that start out only have simple lines, angles, circles, rectangles and motion indicators, and some basic words that help describe what they are seeing (and that’s the way it should be when you first get started.)

You spend roughly 45 minutes sitting still in a chair, recording your perceptions in a very orderly way. It’s quite boring to watch and most serious remote viewers want to be alone while they do this to avoid distractions showing up in session (except for those that use a monitor as is the case with some CRV based methods).

There is a wealth of information hidden in simplicity. I have known quite a number of non-remote viewers who seem put off by the S.T. (site template) of a session, the final result of the data gathered. It may not look like much, or just come off as a jumble of simple drawings surrounded by words with nothing immediately standing out as anything of interest. Once you have learned the basics of remote viewing, it becomes quite easy to read and have an idea of what is being portrayed, just as an electrician or architect can immediately make sense of blueprints.

It takes months or years of steady practice to walk into session day in and day out, able to draw and describe something in such great and accurate detail that anyone looking at an S.T., including the viewer, is almost always able to name it and explain what is going on or what is the significance of that object.

If you are in search of an unknown, as is often the case with a cue (like a question, a set of words) based remote viewing assignment, you may feel lost at first when trying to make sense of the final product. Greater understanding often is gleaned by providing yourself with feedback: by viewing the photo or reading the cue. It is then that two and two make four. Even with simple photos provided after the completion of a practice session, there are often a number of “aha” moments. It’s these moments that help us to improve.

For group projects only certain data is relied upon: that which repeats itself over at least 2 remote viewer’s sessions for the same assignment. Through trials it has been shown that information gathered in this way approaches 100% accuracy. If you complete a session twice, (preferably blind to the fact that you are completing the same session an additional time) you can usually take the data that repeats and rely on that to help you make decisions. Of course, common sense should always prevail.

There are simple techniques you can use when setting up your “blind assignment basket” so that you can complete a session on the same assignment twice and not know that you are doing so. This is a slower way of gathering information, but also results in the ability to keep an important project private as well as knowing which information gathered is most reliable.

There are many misconceptions about what remote viewing is and what it is related to in application, form and function. Perception remote viewing is not channeling or meditation or happens as a result of emptying your mind or relaxing or listening to sound, nor is it dowsing or astral projection. No amount of supplements, mantras or subliminal tapes are going to make you able to RV or cause you to have a spontaneous “RV experience” or improve the quality of your work. Only practice, observation and following protocol will cause you to improve. In terms of practicality, it is worlds away from the value astrology reports or tarot card readings can provide (I used to be paid to do both, but have completely quit them).

On a side note… I was very “oh look a squirrel” before I began and would want to scrap sessions left and right for the first six months because I was realizing I had so much brain chatter it was hard to focus. I worked through it and just kept practicing. Now it’s easier for me to focus even when I’m not in session.

Remote viewing requires a commitment to yourself. You must also know why, deep down inside you want to learn and why you want to have this skill at your disposal. You don’t have to have romantic notions of changing the world, but you have to believe yourself and have a strong conviction that keeps you going when times get tough.The easiest part of remote viewing is learning the basic rules. If you are not sure yet if remote viewing is right for you, I suggest just jumping in and learn the basics, while letting yourself know it’s fine if you want to pull back after your initial training to evaluate if this is something you want to be a part of your life, to integrate into your own being, like any other skill or hobby. That time after someone learns to go through the motions and can stumble through a complete session is when a large majority of people either decide they love it or can leave it. The water’s warm, so pull up your skivvies and take the plunge. You won’t melt, I promise.

If you have questions, want to learn more about the subject in general or would like help getting started I do offer some free training and provide free practice photo assignments. I also extend confidential assistance with blind pools, cuing, basic project management and analysis for the novice and experienced remote viewer. We are all here to help each other, just email via the contact form on about.me.

RV is more about untraining mental habits you may have never knew you had, releasing any “psychic” habits as well as letting go of any old methodologies and related previous training.

To properly learn, not be disappointed and get the most “bang for your buck”, you must practice frequently, sticking to the “rules” within the methodology, with every session, to the best of your ability.

Look for more practical remote viewing videos on my channel, based on the Solo ERV method taught in the Project Jedi Remote Viewing Training DVD set.

Leave a comment and let me know what original content you’d like to see.

One aspect of remote viewing is developing good habits such as consistently eliminating current distractions and foreseeing possible distractions during session. But what about when there isn’t any practical way to rid yourself of environmental distractions?

What would you do?

I began my training very close to this bell. I timed my practice sessions to just after midnight and just after noon if at all possible.

I am trained in the methods available on the Project Jedi Remote Viewing Training 4 DVD Set available at ProjectJeDi.net

It is better to improvise, using the tools available to you, than to insist on ideal conditions in which to operate.

“The wind does not break the tree that bends.”

Several methods were discussed on the Project Jedi Remote Viewing DVD Training Set for creating a CRN (Coordinate Reference Number). You are not limited to these methods and you are encouraged to create your own reliable methods that work for you.
It is a good idea to be able to produce numbers sufficiently different from what you or others may happen to create and attach to an assignment. The goal is to have a unique number associated with every photo or cue assigned to a remote viewer.
By feeling comfortable using several methods that properly suit the purpose, you will be better prepared for non-optimal conditions (This is an example of the “no excuse” mentality for implementing RV for your own survival.)

When you have decided to introduce a new method into your preparations for obtaining random numbers for a CRN, test it out first.

Here are a few questions you should ask yourself about the resulting CRN: Is it truly random? Is it random enough to be used in emergency situations? Is it not random, but acceptable as a last resort? Will you actually have easy access to the needed materials when it comes time to create a CRN? Is the method simple and fast enough to be practical? Is there any way to streamline it? Do you like using it?

Practice the process without creating an assignment you will actually remote view. Have you found it good enough to use to make one or two CRNs when you have no other options, or is it better suited for creating batches of practice photo assignments? Do you feel confident in using it?

One common way to select numbers is by using an online random number generator. Many factors may stop you from creating a string of random numbers in the manner you are accustomed to, but don’t let that stop you from using acceptable protocols for remote viewing. For the moment, if you are reading this off of a website, an online random number generator is a completely viable option.

However, never put all your eggs in one basket.

What other “number generators” do you personally have readily available?

The quickest way to acquire numbers suitable for a CRN is to rely on knowledge of the date and time. This method creates a 12 digit CRN. The first half is the date, expressed as a string of six numbers representing the year, month and day in whatever order you usually use. The second half is the hour, minute and second, of the moment you looked at the clock, expressed in either civilian or military format.

Example: [110102/220558]

Be aware that you do not have an equal chance of all of those digits being 0-9. You can further customize this number by replacing the first number of each six digit set with your initials or some letters from your name.

Example: [X10102/Z20558]

Turning Diversions into Tools

Another method discussed on the DVDs involved rolling dice. Depending on your gaming proclivities, you may also have a deck of playing cards.

At one point or another you may require security for your documents. Perhaps you have been put in charge of safely delivering documents & photos or perhaps you would simply like to keep personal family photos or financial information safely in reach of the proper authorities.

Many remote viewing missions are of a confidential nature. You may be tracking a terrorist, a kidnapped child, or have other information you do not wish to get into the wrong hands. Remote viewing instructors also face this challenge. An envelope is needed to conceal the assignment for the RV student which can not be opened until they hand in their assignment.

Encrypted files on your hard drive or Internet storage location are easy to locate/recognize because they often are locked with passwords and usually contain obvious file extensions used by popular retail compression and encryption/decryption software.

The best tactic known is to hide in plain sight. What if you could hide all your encrypted documents and photos inside a image file like a photo? Guess what? You can and it’s FREE and easy for anyone to do!